John Stark
.44 mag
Lots of angles there. She/it bought guns and murdered school children in a religious school associated with at least one nearby church. There is plenty of law on the books from the civil rights era dealing with attacks on churches as a federal crime, and the Gun Free Schools Act would certainly come into play there as well. Federal laws and statutes dealing with investigating terrorism and maybe/probably(!) even "national security" are certainly in play, given the way Nashville PD is going along with the FIBs on their own investigation that they are supposedly "in charge of." I'd imagine fusion centers and Joint Terrorism Task Force protocols play into that, where the melding of local, state, and federal authorities comes into play on something like this. If the murderess traveled out of state recently in anything that might remotely be viewed as part of the intelligence gathering or planning of the crime, that might invoke interstate authority.I'm still trying to figure out where the Feds had any jurisdiction.
This reeks of the Vegas shooting coverup and memory hole that has been ongoing for 3(?) years now, all run by the FedCoats to make evidence to permanently go away, or buried deep like the JFK assassination coverup decade in the running.
Spit balling here to a certain degree on stuff I've read in the past, without engaging in any research at the moment. As in most things, the Feds and their vast number of agencies have given to themselves, and won for themselves (thanks to jurisdictions who go along with it, and through the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, and other overreach), and a vast web of laws, PLENTY of legal authority to stick their noses in most things if they have a reason or perceived need to do so. Most jurisdictions roll right over.
I can remember decades ago when jurisdictions were jealously guarded as little fiefdoms, with local authorities telling agencies from outside to stay out until they gave the ok to come in, or butt out until other authorities got something from a judge to step in, and so on. Jurisdiction, especially when it came to investigations of any sort, was something completely different than nowadays.
Believe it or not, I can remember local authorities telling State Troopers to get the fuck out of their town because it was a "local matter," and knock down drag out fights in courts between local authorities, county, state, and/or Fed all at the same time. For example, Feds tried for decades to get a presence into the local city, but didn't really get there until the very late 90s/early 2000s with Border Patrol.
Its a Brave New Global America. We're deep into the Five Eyes now, and Big Brother is into everything and anything because that is there business now, not ours. There is a vast web of intelligence agencies, and agents embedded in other non-intelligence stuff to keep tabs on anything the governments (national, state, local, AND international) want to keep an eye on. The digital takeover and the surveillance state has grown to a width and depth that would make the Nazis or Soviets blush at in embarrassment for their own crude methods.
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